155 Mass. 26 | Mass. | 1891
Strictly speaking, the only questions open upon the report are whether the plaintiff was entitled to judgment upon the overruling of the answer in abatement, and whether the rulings asked for by the plaintiff should have been given; but, as both parties have argued questions of the admissibility of evidence, we have dealt with them.
1. Upon the question whether judgment should have been entered for the plaintiff upon the overruling of the answer in abatement, the case is governed by Fisher v. Fraprie, 125 Mass. 472. In that case, as in this, the answer filed contained both an answer in abatement and an answer to the merits; and, as was there held, “ If the answer in abatement was overruled as matter of law, the defendant had the right to answer over; if as matter of fact, he might do so at the discretion of the judge.” The plaintiff’s motion for judgment was therefore properly denied.
2. The plaintiff put in evidence the depositions of the widow of the payee and of his daughter. Copies of the depositions are not given, but we infer from the report that both deponents testified that they were present when, on December 16, 1887, a payment was made by the defendant, and indorsed upon the note in her presence. Among the interrogatories were these: “ State in whose handwriting are the indorsements of payments on the back of said note.” “ Particularly examine the indorsement of Dec. 16, ’87, and state in whose handwriting is that indorsement.” Objections to these questions were noted as follows : “ Objected to competency of witness to say, and as immaterial.” The objections were overruled, and the answers were read. The defendant contends that the objections should have been sustained, because the deponents were not qualified to testify as to the handwriting, and because the handwriting of the indorsements _was immaterial. The answers to the interrogatories are not given. Whatever they may have been, the report does not show that the deponents were not competent to testify upon the subject inquired of, or that their testimony was immaterial to the issues; and it is to be presumed that the state of the testimony authorized the presiding justice to find that the deponents were competent to testify, and that the evidence was material.
4. The same considerations justified the refusal to rule that the plaintiff was not the bearer of the note, and that an action could not be maintained upon it in his name.
5. By the third request, — that evidence of the possession of the note by the maker, after the decease of the payee, raised a presumption of its payment or surrender, — we understand that the court was asked to rule either that the presumption was conclusive, or that it was in fact of such weight, when considered with the evidence, as to require the court to find for the defendant. The presumption, however, is merely prima facie; Baring v. Glark, 19 Pick. 220; M'Gee v. Prouty, 9 Met. 547; and the question of its weight was one of fact, upon which the finding of the judge sitting without a jury was final.
6. The note in suit was made in New York, where all parties to it then resided, on September 1, 1884, and was payable in one year and six months from its date, with interest, to Seymour E. Smith, or bearer. It was signed by John Bernice Smith, a son of the payee, and indorsed upon the back by the defendant, who was then Sarah Greason, a single woman. In June, 1885, John Bernice Smith and Sarah Greason intermarried. The evidence was conflicting as to whether the defendant was merely an accommodation indorser; but the court found, without objection, that under the laws of New York, she was not a maker of the note, and could be held only as an indorser. No demand of payment was made of the maker of the note at its maturity, and no notice was given to the defendant as indorser. Seymour E. Smith died on July 25, 1889, testate, at his home in the State
The defendant testified that until after the action was brought she was ignorant of the fact that no demand of payment was made upon the maker; that she knew when the note fell due, and that failure to notify her of its dishonor released her as indorser, and that she was not liable on the note ,1 that she understood the law of New York, and that she was not obliged to pay the note, and never meant to do so, as she was discharged from liability as an indorser. From this testimony it may be found that at and after the time of the dishonor of the note she was ignorant that payment had not been demanded; but it clearly appears that she was aware that she was absolutely free, and discharged from all liability, and that she then intended to keep the advantage of her position, and not to pay the note. Her present contention is, that, even if she has since seen fit to renew her obligation by a new promise, she is not bound thereby, because it was made in ignorance of the fact that she had been discharged from her liability by the want of demand, as well as by the want of notice of dishonor.
Upon this question some authorities hold that proof of a promise after dishonor dispenses with proof of demand and notice; Byles on Bills, (14th ed.) 250; Loose v. Loose, 36 Penn. St. 538 ;
We consider it settled in Massachusetts by the cases of Garland v. Salem Bank, 9 Mass. 408, Low v. Howard, 10 Cush. 159, and 11 Cush. 268, and Kelley v. Brown, 5 Gray, 108, that knowledge on the part of an indorser that demand upon the maker has not been made is material, and must be proved, notwithstanding the fact that he knew that the note had not been paid, and that notice of non-payment had not been given, and was aware that he was discharged from all liability. In Low v. Howard, 11 Cush. 268, 271, the court say, “ That full knowledge of all the facts which should be requisite to revive a legal liability once discharged, ought to include the fact that there had been no demand on the maker, as well as no notice to the indorser.” The precise point does not seem to have been again raised, but the language of subsequent decisions plainly implies that the act of the indorser to revive his liability must be done with a full knowledge of all the material facts. Matthews v. Allen, 16 Gray, 594. Harrison v. Bailey, 99 Mass. 620. Third National Bank v. Ashworth, 105 Mass. 503. Rindge v. Kimball, 124 Mass. 209. Hobbs v. Straine, 149 Mass. 212.
We are therefore of the opinion that the second ruling requested contained a substantially correct statement of the law which it is necessary to apply in the decision of the question whether, if the defendant made a new promise, in either of the ways claimed by the plaintiff, she is bound by such promise. The request may be so construed as to be a declaration of mixed law and fact. If the court sitting without a jury, found as a fact that the defendant, notwithstanding the denial in her own testimony, did know that no demand was made, it would be his duty to decline to give the ruling requested, although it correctly stated the law. He might disbelieve the defendant’s denial of knowledge, and might infer from the facts that at the time of the maturity of the note she was the wife of the maker, and that she knew that it was not paid and that she had not been notified of its dishonor, and was aware that she was absolutely discharged from all liability and yet promised to pay, that
As under the terms of the report, if the rulings asked by the defendant should have been given, a new trial is to be ordered, and as, in addition to the letters of the defendant which the plaintiff contended contained a new promise, there was evidence of a partial payment, and of oral promises of payment, and as the facts with reference to the position of the makqr of the note as one of the residuary legatees of the payee are not sufficiently stated to enable us to deal with the question raised by the fourth request, we deem it unnecessary to consider the remaining questions raised upon the report.
Finding set aside, and new trial ordered.